458 N.E.2d 1287 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1983
Defendant-appellant, Willard Branch, was indicted for aggravated robbery in common pleas case No. CR-168324 on November 2, 1981. On February 16, 1982, he pled not guilty and moved for dismissal for lack of a speedy trial pursuant to R.C.
Appellant had been previously arrested and charged with receiving stolen property and carrying a concealed weapon on July 27, 1981, in case No. CR-166566. He was held in jail in lieu of bail until September 14, 1981, when he was released on bond. This occurred seventeen days prior to appellant's arrest on October 1, 1981 on the aggravated robbery charge in case No. CR-168324. No indictment was filed in case No. CR-166566. The record discloses no further journal entries in case No. CR-166566 until the court nolled the charges February 19, 1982, three days after appellant pled not guilty and moved for dismissal for lack of a speedy trial on February 16, 1982.
The speedy trial motion in case No. CR-168324 (the aggravated robbery charge) was overruled. Appellant then changed his plea in case No. CR-168324 to "guilty." The prosecutor thereupon recommended dismissal of the charges in case No. CR-166566. The court accepted appellant's change of plea, and he was convicted of aggravated robbery and sentenced to four to twenty-five years. The court further ordered, "on recommendation of [the] prosecutor," that the counts in case No. CR-166566 be dismissed for lack of prosecution.
Appellant appeals his conviction for aggravated robbery, and assigns two errors for consideration by this court.
In his first assigned error appellant contends that he was never indicted for receiving stolen property and carrying a concealed weapon in case No. CR-166566, and consequently, he could not be tried for these offenses. He further contends that said charges could not properly be used as a basis for inducing appellant's guilty plea in case No. CR-168324.
The appellant was never tried for the charges lodged against him in case No. CR-166566. These charges were nolled. Furthermore, if appellant had a valid defense to the charges either on the merits or under the constitutional or statutory guarantees of a speedy trial, these could have been raised below. There is no merit to the first assigned error.
In his second assigned error, appellant contends that he was denied his right to a speedy trial, because of the failure of the trial court to bring him to trial within two hundred seventy days after his arrest. The appellant was arrested on October 1, 1981, and was not released on bond. For purposes of the Speedy Trial Act, each day the accused is incarcerated solely on the pending charge is counted as three days in computing the period of limitations, and appellant should have been tried by December 30, 1981.1 As noted above, appellant was not brought to trial until February 19, 1982, when he pleaded guilty. *162
The question arises, however, whether the appellant has waived his right to a speedy trial by pleading guilty. The United States Supreme Court noted in Menna v. New York (1975),
In State v. Stewart (April 17, 1980), Cuyahoga App. Nos. 41269 to 41272, unreported, this court held that a defendant's rights under the Ohio Speedy Trial Act are constitutional, and are not waived by entering a plea of guilty, because they represent an implementation of the Sixth Amendment right of a defendant to a speedy trial. See State v. Pachay (1980),
It is our considered opinion that the Stewart decision was incorrect, for the reason that a defendant's rights under R.C.
In State v. Bound (1975),
The appellant has claimed only that his statutory right to a speedy trial was violated, not his constitutional right. Thus, this right was among those waived when he pled guilty to the indictment.
The decision in this case, that the appellant waived his statutory speedy trial claim by pleading guilty, is supported by all of the decisions on point reported in the Annotation, Waiver or Loss of Accused's Right to Speedy Trial (1958), 57 A.L.R. 2d 302, 343, Section 13.
The appellant's second assignment of error is overruled.
Accordingly, the decision of the trial court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
NAHRA and PRYATEL, JJ., concur.